A pair of billionaire brothers from New Zealand has quietly snapped up 16 beachfront Malibu lots destroyed by last year’s fires, dishing out well over $65 million — with plans to rebuild with prefab homes.

Nick and Mat Mowbray, co-founders of toy and consumer goods giant Zuru, have plans to deliver factory-built prefab homes manufactured in China.

The Kiwi brothers Mat Mowbray (left) and Nick Mowbray (right) are buying up properties impacted by LA wildfires. Instagram/@jaimee

The deals were first reported by realtor.com in August, when the buyers had already dished out $65 million for the first nine properties. The lots were purchased under Zuru Tech Us LLC, the construction division of Zuru, records show.

The scorched Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu, Jan.26, 2025 following the Palisades Fire. Barbara Davidson for NY Post

“For us, we have a research project that focuses on factory-built homes, and we saw an opportunity,” Zuru Tech US operations director Marcel Fontijn told the Real Deal in October.

Nick Mowbray, center, attended Stagecoach festival in Palm Springs, California, in April 2025. Instagram/@jaimee

“If you imagine there being rebuilding efforts on 300 houses that burned down in terms of how many contractors, how many framers [and] how many roofers, where are you going to pack all these people?” Fontijn added. “And that’s where we really saw that we can provide a solution to a problem.”

The Palisades Fire left a community in ruin. London Entertainment for NY Post

The homes reportedly use lightweight concrete walls and concrete roofing touted as “fire safe,” made to be assembled on site. They would each be unique in design and completed in as little as four to six weeks once permits are in hand.

Mat Mowbray jet skiing in a post to Instagram shared July 12, 2025. Instagram/@christinattnz

“Our plan was to build one home that was used by the Mowbrays, but after we bought the first lot, we had many public inquiries if we were interested in buying additional lots,” Fontijn told ABC7. The hope is to finish two homes by the end of 2027, and the remaining 14 by 2029, according to the outlet.

Despite the big plans, Malibu hasn’t received any building permit applications or formal development proposals from the brothers, a spokesperson for the city told The Post on Tuesday.

Nick Mowbray of Little Rascals and Zuru speaks at the Better By Design CEO Summit 2019 at Villa Maria Estate. Getty Images for NZTE

“As with all properties, any future proposals would be subject to the city’s standard review and approval processes in compliance with applicable local and state regulations,” Malibu information officer Matt Myerhoff said.

Mat Mowbray and his parter Christina Tang in 2024. Instagram/@christinattnz

To date, only 22 building permits have been issued in Malibu after roughly 600 homes were destroyed last January, according to the city. But Myerhoff said a total of 488 permits have been issued for repairs, debris removal and other remediation work from the Palisades Fire.

The Mowbray brothers started Zuru in 2003 with their sister Anna, and the company is responsible for products like Bunch O Balloons, Robo Fish and Mini Brands. Today, the Mowbrays are among New Zealand’s wealthiest Kiwis, with a combined fortune estimated around NZ$20 billion (US$11.6 billion) and Zuru on track for billions in annual revenue.

The Mowbrays grew up in Cambridge, a rural town in New Zealand, and started experimenting with toy ideas as teenagers. Mat Mowbray, the older of the two, is often described as the visionary, while Nick Mowbray is seen as the salesman and operator, charged with turning those ideas into a global supply-chain machine. 

Zuru did not return The Post’s request for comment.



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